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By common consent, Ottis Gibson was the greatest single force in county
cricket in 2007. He was Player of the Year in the estimation of the
Professional Cricketers' Association. He propelled Durham to second place
in the County Championship with his 80 wickets, a total exceeded only by
Mushtaq Ahmed whose average was higher. Against Hampshire he took all
ten wickets in one innings, only the third bowler to achieve the feat in the
Championship in the last 50 years. He also hit 578 Championship runs,
although perhaps his two most valuable innings came in the 50-over
competition, the Friends Provident Trophy. In the semi-final, Gibson and
Liam Plunkett came together at 38 for seven, and with rare restraint Gibson
made an unbeaten five while his partner knocked off the runs. In the final,
he hit 15 not out off seven balls to put the seal on Durham's innings, before
taking wickets with the opening two deliveries of Hampshire's reply. To
nobody did Durham owe more for their most successful season than to the
38-year-old Barbadian.
Ottis Delroy Gibson was born in Springhead, near Sion Hill, in
north Barbados on March 16, 1969. A close childhood friend was Vasbert
Drakes, another Barbadian who became a nomadic cricketer. "Dad left when
I was young, but I still see him and I remember going to watch matches
that he was umpiring," Gibson recalls. "There was no other cricketing person
in the family and my mum's always been my biggest fan. From Barbados
Under-19 to the senior team she never missed a ball I bowled. From as early
as I can remember we (he had two brothers and two sisters) would be out
with the other kids, all trying to be the next Malcolm Marshall or Joel
Garner. We had no running water or electricity and we had to do our playing
before 6 p.m. because after that we would be inside trying to read our
schoolbooks round a kerosene lamp. Mum allowed us to have fun, but she
insisted that we did our schoolwork.
"I played a bit of football and basketball, but cricket was the thing in the
Caribbean. Once I got to 15 or 16 it had taken over my life. People in
England now say that basketball has taken over but I say, name me one
famous West Indian basketball player. When I was growing up in Sion Hill
we would organise matches against lads in the next village. Now it's
organised for them. There's the same amount of cricket going on in the
schools, but you don't see boys meeting up and doing it themselves. They
need to do it off the cuff, playing in the streets and developing shots like
you see in India. All my flair came from that. Too many coaches try to curb
natural instincts."
In his itinerant career, Gibson represented Barbados from 1991 to 1998.
In 1994 he played for Glamorgan as something of a tearaway, taking 57
Championship wickets at 34, and he was selected for the West Indies tour of England the following summer when, at Lord's, he made the first of 15
one-day international and two Test appearances. "Everybody who has seen
West Indies in recent years says I should have played more. But to represent
your country is a privilege and I know a lot of good players back home
who haven't had the honour. It's very easy to get bracketed as a one-day
player and perhaps that's what happened to me. It's frustrating, but it's gone."
Gibson also represented three South African provinces between 1992 and
2001, after being told by the Barbados Cricket Association that it was all
right so long as he came back to play for them. He believes South Africa's
was the strongest of the three domestic competitions in which he played,
partly because there was plenty of time to recover between matches. "I found
myself playing against people like Malcolm Marshall, Franklyn Stephenson,
Kepler Wessels and Jimmy Cook, and I had the responsibility of having to
perform as an overseas player. I won the Most Valuable Player award for
Border, which is something I look back on with great pride."
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Gibson coaches James Anderson as England's full-time bowling coach in Sri Lanka
© Getty Images
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He moved to live in England, and did his Level Three coaching certificate
at Lilleshall in the spring of 2001. "Playing for the West Indies was all I
ever wanted to do. I'd already given up playing for Barbados because I
always felt if I wasn't going to play Test cricket I should give younger players
a chance." He became an ECB national coach for the North-West of England
and took his Level Four, but he was told there had to be cutbacks in 2003
and went off to play for Leicestershire for two seasons. It was mainly through
Martyn Moxon, then the Durham coach, that Gibson moved to Riverside in
2006, but Dale Benkenstein also knew him from skirmishes in South Africa.
As he coached and played, he kept on learning - and he was still learning
last season when his game came to fruition. For the third Championship
match he was dropped. "I was disappointed. But there's a phrase in the CD
called Twelfth Man which says 'Don't get bitter, get better' and I used that
every day for the rest of the season. Every time I went on the field I tried
to do everything that was required for the team and I just got better. People
appreciate that, and if the other players see your efforts they raise their
game. I had some fantastic catches taken."
Coaching taught him how to create more variations, particularly in
changing the angle of delivery. He made a habit of taking a wicket in his
first over. "In the Friends Provident final I said I wanted the first over. I
wanted to lead and set the tone. I knew where I wanted to bowl those first
two balls, and I got them in the right spot, slanting across the left-handers."
As soon as Allan Donald decided he could not become England's next
bowling coach permanently, Gibson was on the plane to Sri Lanka for the
one-day series, which England surprisingly won, in large part thanks to his
guidance of the bowlers. It was the culmination of a wonderful season, and
admirable career, when he was subsequently appointed full-time.
© Wisden Cricketer's Almanack
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